There have been people in every state of the US that have had H1N1/09 Swine Flu. There have also been cases in every country of the world in the 2009 pandemic.
There may still be some isolated cases or outbreaks in limited locations around the world right now, including in Alaska. However, the specifics and counts of cases are no longer being tracked by CDC, WHO, and most US states now that the pandemic has been declared over. Influenza cases are monitored, but specific H1N1/09 counts aren't available separately from other influenza reporting any longer.
By the time that the World Health Organization declared the end of the pandemic, all states in the US and all countries of the world have had cases of swine flu.The following states have not had any confirmed cases of the Swine Flu:1. West Virginia2. Alaska
No
No, (I'm going there in September).
I work for the local school district as a nurse, and I can confirm that we have had hundreds of Swine Flu cases in central texas.
The Swine Flu has a much higher death rate than regular flu. Until a few months back the swine flu had a very high mortality rate. The medical developments have brought down the mortality rate but still there are rare cases of mortality because of swine flu. The regular flu on the other hand does not have a known profound mortality rate. The cases of deaths because of regular flu are very rare and not very common. In case of patients who contract any other infection like Hepatitis or any other infection along with a flu, the chances of mortality are high.
Yes, Swine Flu has spread throughout all of the UK.
The numbers and locations of swine flu infections are no longer being tracked and reported separately from other flu-like illnesses now that the pandemic has been declared over. Few tests to determine the exact strain of flu are still being done since the treatment is typically the same for swine (H1N1/09) flu as for any type of flu virus.
There have not been any reported cases of swine flu in rabbits, although several other mammals besides humans can get H1N1/09. Examples of some of the species in addition to humans that do get it are: swine/pigs, dogs, cats, poultry, and ferrets.
That is a hard question to answer and is decided by each school district or individual school if swine flu cases are present in their systems. Regardless of when schools are shut down, any student diagnosed with swine flu should stay home until all chance of infecting others is over and they are completely over it.
It is not from swine, never was, never will. It merely RESEMBLES what swine have. There aren't any proven cases that it was transmitted from a pig or anything to a human being. Source: http://www.cdc.gov/h1n1flu/qa.htm
Brittany Murphy is the first known celebrity death from swine flu.
There may still be some isolated cases or outbreaks in limited locations around the world, including in Australia. However, the specifics and counts of cases are no longer being tracked now that the pandemic has been declared over. Influenza cases are still monitored as they always have been, but specific H1N1/09 counts aren't available separately from other influenza reporting any longer. Australia had thousands of cases of Swine Flu in 2009, with the greatest number in the state of Victoria. The first swine flu death was recorded in June 2009, Australia's winter, around the same time that over 1000 cases of swine flu were noted.